Category Archives: Wildlife

Samples of wildlife photography

Birds, a Confused Terrapin, and more little furry things

The sunshine brought out lots of people today, which put paid to any chance of getting some photos of the rats in decent light. That’s fair enough, and I took the opportunity to photograph some of the other Falmer inhabitants.

There’s a strong colony of jackdaws. They roost in the local church, and provide an appropriately Gothic feel to the place on misty days. On sunny days, they just chatter amongst themselves and occasionally tangle with the gulls. Here’s one taking some time out on a decaying tree stump.

jackdaw

Collared doves are not as numerous as the jackdaws, but are certainly mainstays of the local bird population. Slightly smaller than woodpigeons, they originated in the Middle East and only arrived in the UK in the 1950s. They are now established residents in the UK.

Collared dove

The last of the birds for today is a more infrequent sighting, a great spotted woodpecker.

Great spotted woodpecker

I’d not seen much of the terrapins this year. These are not native creatures and ideally should be removed from the pond. This one seems to be a tad short-sighted. I think it thinks its found a friend 😉

Terrapin next to rock

And yes, I did see some rats. They were generally keeping out of sight and out of the way of the (human) family groups enjoying the sunshine around the pond. In quieter moments they made fleeting appearances. The first shot is of an adult making a dash across some open ground.

rat

To close, a couple of shots of a juvenile rat foraging in the very shallow fringe of the pond. This was quite a secluded area, overhung by the branches of the pond-side trees.

rat

rat

Camera note: all shots taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in Behaviour, Birds, rats Tagged , , , , |

Rat-a-tat-tat

Yes, I’m into a loop, stuck on one species and gathering an absurd number of photos of our local rat population. The long hot summer has clearly played a part, and with the water low in the pond the exposed banks (which are soft and easy to burrow) make a more or less perfect habitat. That, and the constant duck-feeding that goes on which means as well as fallen seed there are such delicacies as rice grains on offer. They’re doing well and are now quite hard not to see.

As with yesterday, this is a small selection. More shots (but nothing approaching all the shots) are in the Falmer Rats 2013 gallery.

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Camera note: all shots taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.

Also posted in rats Tagged , , |

Rats Galore! and a badger video and cull update

It’s probably one of the acquired quirks of wildlife watching that the sight of a rat (and preferably several rats) fascinates rather than repels. Today was fascinating.

I was down at Falmer Pond early this morning and very quickly spotted some young rats scurrying around along the exposed bank of the pond. The low rainfall has left a broad dry mud beach between the bank and the water’s edge. The rats tend to stay near the bank where tehy have their runs and rat-holes, with plenty of cover under the scrubby vegetation. I parked myself at the edge of the water, and watched.

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

There were four youngsters scurrying around, though it was difficult to get them all in shot at the same time. At lunchtime, in much improved light, I tried again. I saw several more young rats, including a very young one down at the edge of the water, and a bold adult.

Rats

Rats

Rats

Rats

There’s a slightly more extended selection of today’s rats in the Falmer Rats 2013 gallery.

Badger Cull Update

Normally the rats would be more than enough for a single post, but last night’s trail cam footage was dominated by a species that is making headlines at the moment. We had several visits from a badger through the night. This one is safe from the cull at the moment, but we are in a target area so that situation may change if the cull is extended. There’s a #stopthecull feed at the side of this page which carries the latest on the cull. (Edit: it may have temporarily stopped working.)

The facts are that the cull will have at best minimal impact on bovine TB, and may make it worse. More shocking is that no tests are being carried out to determine whether any badgers are carrying bTB, and of over 5000 culled badgers only a tiny percentage will be evaluated for humaneness of kill. DEFRA – the government department responsible – has thus far refused to provide any information on how even that limited sample will be selected, but they have confirmed that in the vast majority of kills the evidence will simply be destroyed. Most kills will be wholly unmonitored. This is a shocking, unscientific, and wholly needless cull of a protected species. Please support the #stopthecull campaign in any way you can.

While some of the data is provisional, the most recent data published by DEFRA is that bovine TB in cattle is declining and that improved bio-security of our cattle herds is having a positive effect. Over 80% of disease transmission is cattle-to-cattle, and better bio-security combined with vaccination will clearly go a very significant way to producing effective control in both the livestock and wildlife populations. These are effective and sustainable interventions, unlike the current cull.

Locally there’s a campaign by the Sussex Badger Vaccination Project to provide vaccinations for badgers, which is likely to be a far more effective long term solution. Please consider supporting them.

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Camera note: all shots taken with the Canon 7D and EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L USM IS lens.